INFORMATION:
'Low-Cost Motility Tracking System (LOCOMOTIS) for Time-Lapse Microscopy Applications and Cell Visualisation by Lynch AE, Triajianto J and Routledge E is published here.
Caption
The instrument adapted by Adam Lynch to study snail immune systems
Contact
Keith Coles, Acting Head of Media Relations, Brunel University London, keith.coles@brunel.ac.uk, 01895 266599.
Adam Lynch, Institute for the Environment, College of Health and Life Sciences, Brunel University London, adam.lynch@brunel.ac.uk, 01895 266868
Scientists could save thousands of pounds with student's DIY microscope
Ph.D. student at Brunel University London makes his own high-tech microscope for £160
2014-11-25
(Press-News.org) Expensive tests for measuring everything from sperm motility to cancer diagnosis have just been made hundreds of thousands of pounds cheaper by a PhD student from Brunel University London who hacked his own microscope.
Adam Lynch, from the university's College of Health and Life Sciences, created his own inverted microscope by adapting a cheap instrument he bought online to save himself time and money.
The tool is used to measure cell motility - how fast cells move from one place to another - but the high-quality equipment, used to automatically test multiple samples, can stretch to hundreds of thousands of pounds.
Now Adam has a cut-price version for a study to understand if a snail's immune system responds to chemical pollutants present in the water, which might influence the levels of transmission of Schistosome parasites from snails to humans. The team at Brunel needed the inverted microscope to see whether immune cell behaviour was affected by polluted water. But they needed more than one machine to be able to run multiple tests.
Adam, who estimates the cost of his system to be around £160 but thinks it could be made cheaper still, said: "When you're looking at motility in cells you're only interested in the data - how fast the cell gets from A to B means more than a high-resolution image. Even with a high-cost microscope you will reduce the image down so that it's just a black dot on the screen moving against a white background so that it's easier for a computer to read."
Adam realised a USB microscope he'd bought online could be clamped upside down on a table to produce the same images as the much more expensive inverted microscope.
"It worked ok as I could sort of see cells, which are about 50 micrometres long, but the images weren't fantastic," he said. "But people don't realise that you can quite easily make a high-magnification microscope, it's just a matter of getting a lens and the right angle of lighting, so when I turned off the lighting that came with the instrument and used external lights I found I could see the cells quite clearly."
Adam bought three cheap microscopes and put them together, then multiplied his output by three.
"If money is no object you can do something better but money certainly is an object and really the only way we could get meaningful data without spending a disproportionate amount of time in the lab was this."
The next step for the technology is to build a more attractive case, and to look for other applications. The technology also means that studies could be carried out in countries where diseases are rife, but resources low.
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
El Niño stunts children's growth in Peru
2014-11-25
Extreme weather events, such as El Niño, can have long-lasting effects on health, according to research published in the open access journal Climate Change Responses. The study, in coastal Peru, shows that children born during and after the 1997-98 El Niño have a lower height-for-age than others born before the event.
Short stature, otherwise known as stunting, is a measure of chronic malnutrition and this generally persists through to adulthood. The research highlights the need for better understanding of the global health issues that may arise and for the ...
Does a yogurt a day keep diabetes away?
2014-11-25
A high intake of yogurt has been found to be associated with a lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes, according to research published in open access journal BMC Medicine. This highlights the importance of having yogurt as part of a healthy diet.
Type 2 diabetes is a chronic condition that occurs when the body doesn't produce enough insulin, or the body's cells develop resistance to insulin. There is an increased risk of developing it if a relative has the condition or if an individual has an unhealthy lifestyle. Approximately 366 million people are affected by type ...
Lancet article: Afferent's P2X3 inhibitor shows 75 percent reduction in chronic cough frequency
2014-11-25
San Mateo, California, November 25, 2014 - Afferent Pharmaceuticals today announced publication of results from a Phase 2 clinical trial demonstrating that the company's novel drug candidate, AF-219, reduced daytime cough frequency by 75% compared to placebo in patients with treatment-refractory chronic cough. These data are featured in an article titled, "P2X3 Receptor Antagonist (AF-219) in Refractory Chronic Cough: A Randomised, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Phase 2 Study," which is appearing online in The Lancet. These results support Afferent's current development ...
News from Annals of Internal Medicine Supplement
2014-11-25
Task Force finds insufficient evidence to recommend for or against routine vitamin D screening
Free content
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) found insufficient evidence to assess the benefits and harms of screening for vitamin D deficiency in asymptomatic adults. The recommendation statement and systematic evidence review are being published together in Annals of Internal Medicine. Vitamin D is obtained through diet (fatty fish, cod liver oil, dairy products, fortified beverages and food, and supplements) and synthesis triggered by sun exposure. There ...
Ambulance risk
2014-11-24
Boston, MA (November 24, 2014)--Lights flash, a siren wails and an ambulance races to help a person whose heart has stopped beating.
In most cases, a 911 dispatcher will have sent an advanced life support, or ALS, ambulance to the scene, equipped with sophisticated gear and staffed with a crew of highly trained paramedics who can deliver specialized care in the field, including intubations and IV interventions.
Unfortunately, according to a new study by health policy researchers at Harvard, those advanced techniques actually increase the patient's risk of death.
People ...
Starting treatment soon after HIV infection improves immune health, study finds
2014-11-24
In many countries outside the United States, decisions on when to start treatment for HIV infection are based on the level of certain white blood cells called CD4+ T cells, which are commonly measured to determine immune health. A study by National Institutes of Health grantees suggests that the best time to start treatment also should be based on how much time has elapsed since becoming HIV-infected. The researchers found that starting treatment within a year of seroconversion--the period within a few weeks of HIV infection when antibodies to the virus are first produced ...
Two studies, 2 editorials put focus on school breakfasts, lunches
2014-11-24
Study: Breakfast in Classroom Program Linked to Better Breakfast Participation, Attendance
Schools offering Breakfast in the Classroom (BIC) had higher participation in the national school breakfast program and attendance, but math and reading achievement did not differ between schools with or without BIC, according to a study published online by JAMA Pediatrics.
BIC is usually served in the classroom at the start of the school day and is typically a universal free meal. Evidence suggests breakfast may improve cognitive function and other outcomes for children and has ...
Delaying ART in patients with HIV reduces likelihood of restoring CD4 counts
2014-11-24
A larger percentage of patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) achieved normalization of CD4+ T-cell counts when they started antiretroviral therapy (ART) within 12 months of the estimated dates of seroconversion (EDS) rather than later, according to a report published online by JAMA Internal Medicine.
The goal of ART has been focused primarily on achieving an undetectable HIV viral load (VL) because not doing so has been associated with impaired immune recovery. However, a specific CD4+ T-cell count as a target for optimal immunologic health has not been validated ...
Basic vs. advanced life support outcomes after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
2014-11-24
Patients who had cardiac arrest at home or elsewhere outside of a hospital had greater survival to hospital discharge and to 90 days beyond if they received basic life support (BLS) vs. advanced life support (ALS) from ambulance personnel, according to a report published online by JAMA Internal Medicine.
Emergency medical services (EMS) respond to an estimated 380,000 cardiac arrests that happen annually out of the hospital. ALS providers, or paramedics, are trained to use sophisticated, invasive interventions (such as intubation - the placement of a breathing tube) to ...
Narrow time window exists to start HIV therapy, study shows
2014-11-24
SAN ANTONIO (Nov. 24, 2014) -- HIV-1-infected U.S. military members and beneficiaries treated with antiretroviral therapy (ART) soon after infection were half as likely to develop AIDS and were more likely to reconstitute their immune-fighting CD4+ T-cells to normal levels, researchers reported Nov. 24 in JAMA Internal Medicine.
Other immune benefits of starting treatment early and reaching a normal CD4+ T-cell count on therapy were also reported, including reductions in the activation state of T-cells, which influences HIV disease course, and improvements in the ability ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Intermittent fasting cut Crohn’s disease activity by 40% and halved inflammation in randomized clinical trial
New study in JNCCN unlocks important information about how to treat recurring prostate cancer
Simple at-home tests for detecting cat, dog viruses
New gut-brain discovery offers hope for treating ALS and dementia
Cognitive speed training linked to lower dementia incidence up to 20 years later
Businesses can either lead transformative change or risk extinction: IPBES
Opening a new window on the brainstem, AI algorithm enables tracking of its vital white matter pathways
Dr. Paul Donlin-Asp of the University of Edinburgh to dissect the molecular functions and regulation of local SYNGAP1 protein synthesis with support from CURE SYNGAP1 (fka SynGAP Research Fund)
Seeing the whole from a part: Revealing hidden turbulent structures from limited observations and equations
Unveiling polymeric interactions critical for future drug nanocarriers
New resource supports trauma survivors, health professionals
Evidence of a subsurface lava tube on Venus
New trial aims to transform how we track our daily diet
People are more helpful when in poor environments
How big can a planet be? With very large gas giants, it can be hard to tell
New method measures energy dissipation in the smallest devices
More than 1,000 institutions worldwide now partner with MDPI on open access
Chronic alcohol use reshapes gene expression in key human brain regions linked to relapse vulnerability and neural damage
Have associations between historical redlining and breast cancer survival changed over time?
Brief, intensive exercise helps patients with panic disorder more than standard care
How to “green” operating rooms: new guideline advises reduce, reuse, recycle, and rethink
What makes healthy boundaries – and how to implement them – according to a psychotherapist
UK’s growing synthetic opioid problem: Nitazene deaths could be underestimated by a third
How rice plants tell head from toe during early growth
Scientists design solar-responsive biochar that accelerates environmental cleanup
Construction of a localized immune niche via supramolecular hydrogel vaccine to elicit durable and enhanced immunity against infectious diseases
Deep learning-based discovery of tetrahydrocarbazoles as broad-spectrum antitumor agents and click-activated strategy for targeted cancer therapy
DHL-11, a novel prieurianin-type limonoid isolated from Munronia henryi, targeting IMPDH2 to inhibit triple-negative breast cancer
Discovery of SARS-CoV-2 PLpro inhibitors and RIPK1 inhibitors with synergistic antiviral efficacy in a mouse COVID-19 model
Neg-entropy is the true drug target for chronic diseases
[Press-News.org] Scientists could save thousands of pounds with student's DIY microscopePh.D. student at Brunel University London makes his own high-tech microscope for £160
